Why Superman ain't coming: Additional
收藏DataCite Commons2026-05-07 更新2026-05-07 收录
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https://zenodo.org/doi/10.5281/zenodo.20059224
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A Superman event would not remain a physical incident; it would immediately become an information crisis. Modern emergency doctrine already treats communication and coordination as part of incident management, not as an afterthought. FEMA’s NIMS framework is built to coordinate multiple agencies, jurisdictions, and information channels during incidents, which means a publicly visible Superman rescue would rapidly enter a formal communication environment rather than remain a simple eyewitness story.
The first public intervention would create competing narratives: miracle, alien, weapon, immigrant, savior, threat, hoax, religious sign, and national security event. Institutions would likely attempt to stabilize meaning before stabilizing the actor. This matters because narrative instability produces public pressure, copycat behavior, panic, and political opportunity. In this sense, Superman would not only be classified physically; he would be classified symbolically.
Social media would intensify the response. A rescue recorded on phones would create immediate data trails: location, witnesses, video metadata, facial analysis, movement patterns, and public sentiment. DHS-linked intelligence and public safety systems have historically used information-sharing networks and fusion-center logic to connect local, state, and federal data streams, although these systems have also been criticized for mission creep, poor oversight, and civil-liberties risks.
Addition to thesis:
Superman would not simply become famous. He would become an information object. Public belief in him would become a managed variable, because whoever controls the narrative gains leverage over whether he is understood as a hero, hazard, asset, foreign intrusion, or unauthorized force.
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Zenodo
创建时间:
2026-05-06



